Bottle of Italian extra virgin olive oil on a UK kitchen table

Pantry • Extra virgin olive oil • UK

Italian Extra Virgin Olive Oil in the UK9 Bottles You Can Trust

How to pick good Italian olive oil in the UK without wasting money: one everyday bottle, one finishing bottle, plus a few bulk-tin options if you cook a lot.

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Published: 8 Dec 2025Updated: 8 Dec 2025~10 min read

UK-available only

Oils you can actually buy on Amazon UK or from major UK sellers — no impossible-to-find brands.

Label decoding

We break down what EVOO, cold-pressed, DOP, IGP and blends really mean in practice.

2-bottle strategy

One solid everyday bottle for cooking and one better bottle for finishing — max flavour, less waste.

TL;DR — a simple olive oil plan for UK kitchens

1) One everyday bottle Pick a decent extra virgin olive oil in a dark bottle for frying, roasting and everyday cooking. It doesn’t need to be fancy, just reliable.

2) One finishing bottle Choose a more fragrant, peppery EVOO to drizzle raw over salads, bread, soups and finished pasta.

3) Protect oil from light & heat Store it in the dark, away from the hob, close the cap tightly: treat good oil like wine, not like cheap vegetable oil.

Want a printable one-pager with the 2-bottle strategy, storage tips and brand list?

What does EVOO actually mean?

EVOO stands for Extra Virgin Olive Oil. It’s the highest common grade of olive oil and the one that makes sense to use if you care about flavour and health.

  • It’s made only from olives — no blends with other vegetable oils.
  • It has very low free acidity (max 0.8%), which signals healthy olives and good processing.
  • It’s produced by mechanical means only (no solvents) and usually labelled as “cold-pressed”.
  • If a bottle doesn’t clearly say “extra virgin”, it’s probably a more refined, flatter-tasting oil.

How to spot good extra virgin olive oil (even online)

You don’t need to be an oil sommelier: a few label clues and a couple of kitchen tests are enough.

See the 2-bottle strategy →
SignalWhat to look forWhy it matters
Bottle or tinDark glass or metal tin, not clear plasticShields oil from light and heat, slows rancidity.
Origin“100% Italian” or a clear DOP/IGP regionTraceable origin usually means better quality control.
DatesBest-before date and, ideally, harvest yearVery old oil loses aroma and tastes flat.
TasteA little peppery tickle and slight bitternessThat’s polyphenols: it’s normal and a good sign.

There’s no single perfect oil for everyone: test 1–2 different bottles and keep the one you genuinely enjoy.

Which olive oil to use where (hob, oven, finishing)

Instead of 6 half-used bottles, keep 2–3 with a clear job.

Oil typeBest useQuick examples
Everyday EVOOSautéing, roasting, pan-cooking, marinadesRoast veg, tomato pasta, chickpeas in the pan.
Finishing EVOODrizzling over hot and cold dishesBruschetta, salads, soups, grilled meat/fish.
Big tins (3–5L)If you cook often for several peopleStews, oven trays, everyday pasta.
Neutral oilDeep frying, sweet bakingChips, cakes when you don’t want to use EVOO.

The 2-bottle strategy: the minimum that actually works

If you rent, share a kitchen or have limited space, this combo covers 90% of what you cook.

  1. Step 1 — pick your base oil Choose a simple Italian or Mediterranean-blend EVOO in a dark 750ml–1L bottle that isn’t the very cheapest, but still good value.
  2. Step 2 — pick your finishing oil Add a smaller, more aromatic bottle (DOP/IGP or single-region) that you only use raw.
  3. Step 3 — decide where it lives Keep both bottles in a cupboard near the hob but not above it. If you buy a big tin, decant into smaller dark bottles.

Tip: if you share a kitchen, label your finishing bottle with your name. It’s cheaper than most ‘gourmet sauces’ but upgrades everything.

How to store olive oil (and spot when it’s gone bad)

  • Keep away from hob, oven and radiators: heat is the enemy.
  • Store in a cupboard or pantry, not on a sunny windowsill.
  • Close the cap properly: oxygen speeds up oxidation.
  • If oil smells like wax, cardboard or tastes totally flat, it’s likely rancid.
If you buy a big tin, note the opening date and aim to finish it within 6–9 months.

Your Italian olive oil mini kit (UK version)

Indicative links to help you choose. Some links are Amazon affiliate and may earn us a small commission at no extra cost to you.

Back to strategy ↑

1) Everyday EVOO

  • 750ml–1L dark glass bottle or tin.
  • Italian or Mediterranean blend, medium flavour (not too intense).
  • Perfect for pasta, veg and everyday cooking.

2) Finishing EVOO

  • Smaller bottle (500ml or less) but higher quality.
  • Clear origin (e.g. Sicily, Puglia, Tuscany) or DOP/IGP label.
  • Use only raw on bread, salads, soups.

3) Big tin (if you cook a lot)

  • 3–5L metal tin kept in a cool, dark cupboard.
  • Decant into 1–2 smaller dark glass bottles.
  • Makes sense only if you cook a lot or share purchases.

What this kit gives you

  • One oil that’s always fine to cook with.
  • One special oil that makes bread, salads and soups taste Italian.
  • Less waste: you buy on purpose and store properly.

Affiliate note: some links may be Amazon affiliate links. You don’t pay more; they help keep these guides free.

FAQ — Italian olive oil, UK edition

Does it have to be Italian to be good?
No. There are excellent oils from Spain and Greece too. But if you want a familiar Italian profile and more consistency, 100% Italian is a good starting point.
Can I fry with extra virgin olive oil?
Yes, as long as you don’t let it smoke. But for deep frying, a good neutral oil is often more practical, and you keep EVOO for sautéing and finishing.
How long does a bottle last after opening?
Ideally finish it within 3–6 months. After 12 months open, even if it’s still ‘ok’, aroma is usually much weaker.
Is the cheap supermarket EVOO OK?
For basic cooking, often yes. For drizzling on finished dishes, a slightly better bottle with more character makes a big difference.

Related reads

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Download the Italian olive oil cheat sheet (PDF)

A one-page overview of the 2-bottle strategy, storage tips, label notes and space to write down your favourite brands.

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Best Italian Extra Virgin Olive Oils in the UK (2025): 9 Bottles You Can Trust